Book, Chapter

 1 Life    |      Oration, containing all the grace and vertue of the art Oratory,
 2    1,  7|       myself and devising of the grace of my companion Pythias.
 3    2,  8|         resembleth the very same grace as his mother Salvia doth,
 4    2,  9|         the intent to shew their grace and feature, wil cast off
 5    3, 14|      verily all the City for the grace that is in you, intend to
 6    4, 21|           who for his bounty and grace was beloved entirely of
 7    4, 22|        seemest unable to get the grace of thy lover, by no other
 8    7, 40|           fearefull, without any grace, and dastard-like coucheth
 9    8, 46| beginning of the world one onely Grace corrupted the sentence betweene
10    9, 47|   religion, and merite my divine grace, know thou, that I will
11    9, 47|       that hath merited so great grace from heaven, as by the innocencie
12    9, 48|          blast of windes) of the grace and benefit which I received
13    9, 48|      kind, who by thy bounty and grace nourishest all the world,
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License